'Glee' cast members react to GQ kerfuffle

In light of the pseudo-controversy over those "Glee" GQ photos, a couple of cast members from the show have spoken out.

Dianna Agron at the SAG Awards earlier this year. (AP)

Dianna Agron -- otherwise known as Quinn Fabray, who flashes some flesh in the GQ spread, albeit not as much as co-star Lea Michele -- posted an apology to her Tumblr blog.

"Now, in perpetuating the type of images that evoke these kind of emotions, I am sorry," she writes. "If you are hurt or these photos make you uncomfortable, it was never our intention. And if your eight-year-old has a copy of our GQ cover in hand, again I am sorry. But I would have to ask, how on earth did it get there?"

" 'Glee' is a show that represents the underdogs, which is a feeling I have embraced much of my own life, and to those viewers, the photos in GQ don’t give them that same feeling. I understand completely."

Agron is careful to note at the beginning of her post that her comments are only representative of her own feelings, not her co-stars' nor the network's. So far, the other two GQ Gleeks -- Michele and Cory Monteith -- have remained mum. But Mark Salling, who plays Puck on the show, doesn't think there's any reason to apologize.

"We're obviously not in high school," he told a radio show host, as noted by Us. "It's tongue-in-cheek that we're in high school, so whatevs. ... There's more important things to worry about in the world."